The F4F Wildcat

Grumman's first "Cat"

Originally published in The Dispatch magazine, Volume 17, Number 1, Spring, 1992
edition. If you are interested in subscribing to The Dispatch please write
to The Commemorative Air Force, ATTN: Dispatch Editor, PO Box 62000, Midland, TX
79711-2000 or call (432) 563-1000. Reproduced with permission.

Stories of exceptional aircraft, like those of heroic persons,
are usually more interesting if one knows their background and/or lineage. Planes, again
like people, are extensions of their background and ancestry; they are what they are
called upon to do, and they are because of what because of their evolution from earlier
forms.

Take for instance, the Grumman F4F and FM series fighter that ushered in and
ushered out...World War II.

For several years prior to 1931, Boeing Aircraft Company had the lock on U.S. Navy
shipboard fighter production, but on April 2 of that year, with a signed contract from the
Navy for a fighter plane, Grumman got its foot in the door and never looked back.
The FF-1 was a biplane, as were all the naval fighters of the day, but it was the first
retractable gear fighter to serve on a carrier  the USS Lexington, June 1933.
The FF-l was followed in early 1935 by the F2F, the Navy's first single-seat fighter to be
built by Grumman. Though it was still a biplane, it featured what was then a powerful
engine, the 650 h.p. Pratt & Whitney R-1535, and was considered to be one of the
finest fighters around at the time.

Close on the heels of the F2F came the F3F, still a biplane, but larger and more
powerful with the Wright R-1820 engine. This model remained in operational service until
just before World War II.

The mid to late 1930s saw tremendous changes in aircraft design with the advent of the
German Messerschmidt Bf 109, the British Hawker Hurricane, and the Japanese A6M
"Zero". It was evident that the heyday of the biplane fighter was coming to a
close. Grumman, however, was slow to react and when the Navy asked for a new carrier
fighter, Grumman came up with the XF4F-1 prototype which featured an enclosed cockpit,
retractable landing gear, all-metal construction and two sets of wings! A rival
company, Brewster Aviation, came up with the Brewster XF2A "Buffalo"  a
clean monoplane design with the powerful Wright R-1820 engine, and the Navy was impressed
enough to put it in the running. Grumman engineers, also impressed, went back to the
drawing boards and redesigned the XF4F- 1 into a mid-wing monoplane powered by the Pratt
& Whitney R-1830-66 engine which boasted 1,050 h.p.

The Pratt & Whitney engine had a lot of "bugs" in it, however, and after
a series of failures and other engine problems, the Navy selected the "Buffalo"
with an order for 53 F2A-1s and F2A-2s, leaving Grumman out in the cold still
hopeful and still working to overcome their engine problems. Persistence did win out,
finally, and in August, 1939, Grumman won a contract for a new design called the F4F-3,
with production starting in February of the next year. Navy Fighting Squadron Four (VF-4),
aboard the carrier USS Ranger became the first unit to fly what by now was being
called the "Wildcat."

An interesting variation of the Wildcat design was the F4F-7 model, which with its
130-gallon fuselage tank and 555 gallons of fuel in the wings, could actually fly for more
than 24 hours. Designed for reconnaissance purposes, only 21 of these planes were built,
and they saw only limited use.

Actually (and curiously) even though the U.S. Navy had accepted a total of 345 Wildcats
by the end of 1941, the first operational use of this model was by the British Royal Navy.
To find out how and why, we have to go to France. The French Navy had ordered and were
testing Wildcats fitted with a Wright R-1820 engine with a whopping 1,200 h.p. This was in
the spring of 1940, when the German Army began to overrun the French borders. The British
quickly stepped in and took over the rest of the French order. The planes were immediately
put to use and renamed "Martlet Is" by the British military. They soon put in an
order for 100 more and before it was all over, had in service a total of 1,100 Wildcats of
all types.

Back in the United States, the Navy was trying out an even newer design  the
XF4F-4, which became the "folding wing" version of the Wildcat. They soon found
that the added weight of the folding mechanism was heavy enough to degrade performance of
the plane noticeably. Production models were redesigned by cutting out the hydraulic
system and operating the folding and unfolding of the wings manually. These new Wildcats
were then assigned to Fighting Squadron Three (VF-3) on the carrier USS Yorktown in
June, 1942, shortly after the Battle of the Coral Sea. It should be mentioned here the
importance of having folding wing aircraft on carriers by noting that the Yorktown
was able to increase its complement of Wildcats from 18 to 27 with the advent of the
F4F-4.

By the following month, the USS Enterprise and USS Hornet also were
equipped with the new Wildcat.

In Britain, the Royal Navy, after their initial order, stipulated that subsequent
orders should have folding wings and six .50-caliber machine guns rather than four. This
was all well and good, but with six guns they could carry only 240 rounds per gun instead
of the 450 rounds and this reduced firing time from 34 seconds to only 18 seconds. The
newer models were fitted with a later model Pratt & Whitney engine and redesignated
"Martlet IIs."

The F4F-4 was being delivered to U.S. Naval units with the same configuration of six
guns and folding wings as the Martlet IIs without asking the opinion of American
pilots, who were not all happy with this latest version.

As the war continued, it became evident that the Wildcat left something to be desired
in its confrontations with the vaunted Japanese "Zero" in the Pacific skies, and
the Grumman engineers were scrambling to come up with a design that would be better than
or at least hold its own with the frisky Zero. The result was the F6F
Hellcat. To free its facilities for the new plane production, Grumman transferred
production of the Wildcat to the General Motors Eastern Division in New Jersey in June of
1943. All the Wildcats produced by GM were designated FM-1s or later, FM-2s. They differed
from the Grumman version primarily in having four, instead of six, machine guns.

With all the lessons being learned from combat, the Grumman engineers came up with the
XF4F-8, using a higher powered Wright R-1820-56 engine of 1,350 h.p. and weighing about
530 pounds less than the F4F-4 and FM-1. Redesignated FM-2 at the GM plant, this
"Wilder Wildcat" was produced right up to the end of World War II.

Thus, the Wildcat, in its many versions, was in service at the very beginning of the
war as the only really effective U.S. carrier fighter, continuing operations in almost
every naval campaign in every operations area in World War II. At least three of its
American pilots received Medals of Honor while flying the Wildcats. For many months, in
and around the Pacific theater, it was the only naval aircraft to successfully combat the
Japanese air armada. In spite of the fact that the Zero was considered vastly superior in
most categories, the Wildcat managed to hold its own.

And never tell an old (or young) Wildcat pilot that the Zero was a better plane than
the F4F he won't be too polite in his rebuttal!

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